Category: New and Proposed Laws

Yesterday, the ICO published new guidance on data protection implications of a “no deal Brexit”. This includes a “Six Steps to Take” Guide, a blog with embedded guidance and FAQs. In addition, UK government published its plans …

Yesterday, the ICO published new guidance on data protection implications of a “no deal Brexit”. This includes a “Six Steps to Take” Guide, a blog with embedded guidance and FAQs. In addition, UK government published its plans for “No Deal Brexit”.

Here are the key points:

Substantive changes to GDPR rules: GDPR continues to apply under the EU Withdrawal Act. But UK Government will amend it to remove references to “EU institutions and procedures” and references to “Union or Member State law”.

ICO role: The ICO will remain the ICO’s Independent privacy regulator. It will no longer be a member of the European Data Protection Board. But the UK and EU have agreed to implement rules on co-operation between the ICO and the Board.

Data Transfers to EEA countries and Gibraltar: the UK will transitionally recognise all EEA states and Gibraltar as providing adequate protection for personal data. Personal data continues to flow freely from the UK to these countries. But this may be kept under review.

Data Transfers from the EEA to the UK: you need a transfer solution in place. This may require re-papering with SCCs to be clear that the UK is a data importer or another transfer solution.

Data Transfers under EU adequacy decisions: The UK will preserve the effect of the EU adequacy decisions on a transitional basis. Data Transfers to these jurisdictions can continue uninterrupted. This covers: Andorra, Argentina, Canada (commercial organisations), Faroe Islands, Guernsey, Israel, Isle of Man, Jersey, New Zealand, Switzerland, Uruguay and USA (under Privacy Shield framework). As Privacy Shield is an EU/US agreement, it is less clear how the UK can recognise it post-Brexit. The ICO have actually said that Privacy Shield would be excluded from this arrangement but that the UK government’s intention is to make arrangements for it to continue to apply. This will need a “watching brief”. It may require an alternative solution to be in place for transfers from UK to US if these arrangements are not in place in time.

Data Transfers from countries with an existing EU adequacy decision to the UK: These transfers were based on an adequacy decision in place with the EU. It will be for each individual country to determine whether it will respect that decision regarding transfers to UK. But transfer solutions may be necessary.

Data Transfers from UK under EU Standard Contractual Clauses (SCCs): you are probably using SCCs to export data to countries like the US. No action is required on these at this time provided you have SCCs in place. The UK government plans to recognise EU SCCs. The ICO will be given the power to issue new SCCs (presumably customised for UK terminology) post-Brexit.

BCRs: Existing authorisations of BCRs made by the ICO continue to be recognised in UK law post-Brexit. The UK will also recognise BCRs approved by other EU supervisory authorities pre-Brexit. The DCMS paper suggests that post-Brexit, the ICO will continue to be able to authorise new BCRs but only under domestic law. It is not clear why BCRs approved post-Brexit by the EU would not be potentially valid for transfers from the UK (as UK BCRs are for transfers from adequate jurisdictions). BCRs (both approved and in-flight applications) will presumably need to transition to a new Lead Supervisory Authority. Existing BCRs will also need to be updated to reflect the UK as a third country.

One Stop Shop: If you’re only established in the UK post-Brexit (not the rest of the EU), you’ll lose the benefit of “One Stop Shop”. You will also lose the benefit of “One Stop Shop” where you no longer undertake any cross-border processing in the EU due to Brexit (e.g. you previously processed only in two EU countries one of which was the UK). This may mean that in the event of a breach you would need to deal with both the ICO as well as the supervisory authorities in the each of the relevant EU countries in which individuals are affected. This raises the possibility of multiple enforcement actions (including fines).

There are a number of other significant implications:

Consider updating GDPR documentation (e.g. Article 30 records) and privacy notices (e.g. references to the UK as part of the EU and in relation to data transfers).

If you end up not established in the EU post-Brexit but are caught by the EU extra-territorial scope, you’ll probably need to appoint a Representative (one Representative in the jurisdiction in which you have the majority of your customers). Conversely, if you target products into or monitor data subjects in the UK but are not established here, you probably need to appoint a UK Representative.

Consumer privacy rights in California are well established. The California Constitution expressly grants California citizens a right to privacy. And existing California law provides for the confidentiality of personal information in various contexts, i…

Consumer privacy rights in California are well established. The California Constitution expressly grants California citizens a right to privacy. And existing California law provides for the confidentiality of personal information in various contexts, including under the Online Privacy Protection Act, the Privacy Rights for California Minors in the Digital World Act, and Shine the Light. California law also requires businesses that suffer a breach of security to disclose the breach to consumers, and in some instances law enforcement, if sensitive information is compromised.

On June 28, 2018, California governor Jerry Brown further expanded California consumer privacy rights by signing into law the California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018 (“CCPA”) (California Civil Code §§ 1798.100 to 1798.198) – a sweeping new privacy law that imposes significant changes to how businesses collect, store, sell, and process consumer “personal information,” and will give give California residents broad rights to inquire about what personal information has been collected, with whom it has been shared, and how it may be deleted. The CCPA goes into effect January 1, 2020. Its final status, however, is far from clear.

Below is a history of the CCPA, a summary of its key elements as adopted, including recently adopted technical amendments, and practical takeaways for covered entities as the law moves from passage to 2020 enforcement.

CCPA Background

In the aftermath of the Cambridge Analytica scandal, and in the footsteps of Europe’s General Data Protection Regulation (“GDPR”), California privacy advocates introduced a ballot initiative on October 12, 2017 called “The Consumer Right to Privacy Act of 2018” (No. 17-0039). The ballot initiative largely mirrored what is now the language in the CCPA. Due to the challenges of changing laws passed through California’s direct ballot initiative, including the requirement that a ballot initiative can only be undone by two-thirds of the popular vote (or else modified by a 70% vote from both state houses), the California legislature agreed to pass the CCPA in exchange for the ballot initiative being withdrawn. Because it was a ballot initiative and would would have been voted on by the California voters during the recent November election cycle, the last day to withdraw the ballot measure was on June 28, 2018. Accordingly, the CCPA was passed unanimously on June 28, 2018 by the California legislature and signed by the governor the same day.

Because the CCPA was passed in one day, it was for the most part poorly written. Accordingly, California lawmakers almost immediately began the amendment process by introducing Senate Bill 1121 (SB-1121) as a cleanup meant to make technical corrections to the law. Those amendments were the subject of a contentious battle between interested stakeholders. On August 6, 2018, a group of business stakeholders, including the California Chamber of Commerce, Association of National Advertisers, California Bankers Association, and Retail Industry Leaders Association, sent a letter to California legislators and encouraged various amendments to fix aspects of the bill that “would be unworkable and that would result in negative consequences unintended by the authors,” such as: (1) extending the compliance deadline from January 1, 2020; (2) clarifying the definition of consumer and “personal information” to avoid conflicts of law; (3) clarifying the scope of obligations on businesses relating to the identification and deletion of data; and (4) addressing technical inconsistencies. On August 13, 2018, a coalition of consumer advocacy groups responded by arguing “the sky is not falling, as industry suggests” and claimed the business community’s proposed changes would “fundamentally water down” the CCPA’s privacy protections. And on August 22, 2018, California AG Xavier Becerra sent a letter to express his concern that the CCPA “imposes several unworkable obligations and serious operational challenges” upon the AG’s office, including: (1) requiring the AG to provide opinions to businesses; (2) impose penalties in conflict with the California Constitution; (3) requiring the AG to provide notice prior to enforcement actions; (4) requiring the AG to issue implementing regulations within one year of the law’s passage; and (5) by not having a more expansive private right of action.

On September 5, 2018, SB-1121 was finalized on the last day of the legislature’s current legislative session, and sent to the governor’s desk for signature. It was recently signed into law by the governor. The amendment, which is described in greater detail below, is largely responsive to the AG’s complaints, and is seen as the first step in what may be a lengthy fight over what the final law will look like when it takes effect January 1, 2020.

Key Elements Of New Law As Adopted

Who Is Covered?

Businesses

As adopted, the CCPA applies to: (1) any for-profit entity (e.g., sole proprietorship, LLC, corporation); that (2) does business in California; (3) collects or directs to be collected consumer personal information, or determines the purposes and means of processing said personal information; and (4) satisfies any of the following three thresholds:

Annual gross revenue in excess of $25 million (the CCPA does not specify whether the “gross revenue” is California only, nationwide, or global turnover);

Annually buys, receives, sells, or shares the “personal information”[1] of 50,000 or more California residents; or

Derives 50% or more of annual revenues from selling consumer “personal information”.

The International Association of Privacy Professionals estimates at least 500,000 U.S. businesses will fall within the scope of the CCPA.

Consumers

The CCPA’s definition of “consumer” is equally broad. The CCPA defines “consumer” as a natural person who is a California resident, as defined in 18 CCR § 1704, however identified, including by any unique identifier. This definition therefore not only encompasses a “consumer” in the traditional sense (i.e., someone that has purchased a product from a business), but also any “individual” in California that is a California resident. This ostensibly would include employees of businesses, individuals who enter into commercial transactions with other businesses, and non-consumers of particular business. The business community is already lobbying the California legislature to narrow this definition.

What Is Covered?

The CCPA governs how businesses treat “consumer” “personal information.” The CCPA defines “personal information” broadly to include information that “identifies, relates to, describes, is capable of being associated with, or could reasonably be linked, directly or indirectly, with a particular consumer or household.” The CCPA does not define “household.” This definition includes, but is not limited to:

SB-1121 limits the definition “personal information” by stating that IP address, geolocation data, and web browsing history would constitute personal information only if the data “identifies, relates to, describes, is capable of being associated with, or could reasonably be linked, directly or indirectly, with a particular consumer or household.” The amendment does not define “household.”

New Consumer Rights

Under the CCPA, as adopted, consumers are given a broad suite of new rights.

Right of Disclosure. Consumers will be permitted to request that a business disclose both the categories and specific pieces of the personal information collected.

Right of Deletion. Consumers will be permitted to request that a business delete personal information it has collected about the consumer, including all data in the possession of the businesses’ vendors. There are several exceptions to this right / obligation, including if the information requested to be deleted is necessary for the business or service provider to maintain the consumer’s personal information in order to:

Complete the transaction for which the personal information was collected, provide a good or service requested by the consumer, or reasonably anticipated within the context of the business’s ongoing business relationship with the consumer, or otherwise perform a contract between the business and the consumer;

Detect security incidents, protect against malicious, deceptive, fraudulent, or illegal activity; or prosecute those responsible for that activity;

Exercise free speech, ensure the right of another consumer to exercise his or her right of free speech, or exercise another right provided by law;

Comply with a legal obligation (the CCPA does not define or limit the phrase “legal obligation”); or

To enable solely internal uses of the personal information that are “reasonably aligned” with the expectations of the consumer based on the consumer’s relationship with the business.

Right of Portability. Consumers will be permitted to request that a business provide the consumer with a copy of his or her personal information in a readily usable format that can be transferred to another entity easily; and

Right to Opt-Out. Consumers will be able to request that a business not sell personal data to third parties.

New Business Obligations

In addition to responding to consumer requests for the above information, businesses will have additional obligations under the new law.

Duty of Disclosure. Covered businesses will be required to disclose to a consumer “at or before the point of collection” the “categories of personal information to be collected and the purposes for which the categories of personal information” will be used. Businesses will be prohibited from collecting additional categories of personal information or use personal information collected for additional purposes without first providing the consumer with notice consistent with this section.

Update to Privacy Policy / Notices. Businesses will be required to establish a “clear and conspicuous” link on their website entitled “Do Not Sell My Personal Information.” This page will enable consumers to exercise the right to opt-out of the sale of their personal information. If the consumer opts-out, the business must wait at least 12 months from the date the consumer opts-out before requesting the consumer authorize the sale of his or her personal data. A business that collects personal information about consumers must also disclose the consumer’s rights to request the deletion of the consumer’s personal information. That disclosure must include two or more designated methods for submitting requests for deletion, including at a minimum a toll-free telephone number, and if the business maintains a website, the website address.

Anti-Discrimination Provisions. Businesses will be prohibited from discriminating against any consumer for exercising their rights under the new law. This means, in practical terms, denying a consumer goods or services, charging different prices, or providing a lower quality of services or goods. Businesses will, however, be able to charge a different price or level of good or service if the difference is “reasonably related to the value” of the consumer’s data. The new law also allows businesses to offer consumers “financial incentives” for the collection and sale of their personal information.

Covered entities should note, however, that these exemptions may only be partial. The definition of “personal information” under the CCPA is, in most cases, broader than the definition of covered information in the statutes listed above. Thus, it is plausible that a business could be collecting the broad array of “personal information” under the CCPA, but only a small subset of that information is covered under the statutes listed above.

Below is a summary of each exemption, as adopted and amended:

Health Information Exemption: The CCPA, as adopted, exempts “protected or health information” collected by a covered entity pursuant to the CMIA or governed by the privacy, security, and breach notification rules issued by the Department of Health and Human Services (45 CFR Parts 160 and 164), established pursuant to HIPAA. SB-1211 cleaned up this exemption up by clarifying the types of information covered: (1) “medical information”[2] governed by the CMIA; (2) “protected health information”[3] “collected by a covered entity or business associate” governed by the privacy, security, and breach notification rules set forth under HIPAA and its implementing regulations; (3) a “provider of health care” governed by the CMIA or a covered entity under HIPAA, “to the extent the provider or covered entity maintains patient information in the same manner” as medical information or protected health information as described above; and (3) information collected as part of a clinical trial subject to the Federal Policy for the Protection of Human Subjects, also known as the Common Rule, pursuant to good clinical practice guidelines issued by the International Council for Harmonisation or pursuant to human subject protection requirements of the United States Food and Drug Administration.

Consumer Reporting Exemption: The CCPA, as adopted, does not apply to the sale of personal information to or from a consumer reporting agency if that information is to be reported in, or used to generate, a consumer report as defined by 15 U.S.C. § 1681a, and as that information is used pursuant to the Fair Credit Reporting Act (15 U.S.C. §§ 1681, et seq.).

GLBA Exemption: The CCPA, as adopted, does not apply to “personal information” that is “collected, processed, sold, or disclosed” pursuant to the federal GLBA and its implementing regulations[4] if “if it is in conflict with that law.” SB-1121 amended this exemption by removing the “in conflict” provision, but making clear that a business so exempted will still be subject to the data security / breach requirements under the CCPA. SB-1121 also added an exemption for “personal information” collected under the California Financial Information Privacy Act (“CFIPA”).[5]

Driver’s Protection Act Exemptions: The CCPA, as adopted, does not apply to personal information collected, processed, sold, or disclosed pursuant to the DPPA[6] “if it is in conflict with that act.” SB-1121 removes the “in conflict” language, but states that exempt businesses will nonetheless be subject to the data security / breach requirements under the CCPA.

Enforcement

AG Opinions / Guidance. The CCPA allows any “business or third party” to seek the opinion of the California AG for “guidance on how to comply” with the CCPA.

AG Implementing Regulations. The AG has one year from the effective date of the CCPA to implement enforcing regulations.

Private Right of Action. The CCPA allows for a private right of action only if the consumer’s personal information is unencrypted, non-redacted, and has been the subject of an unauthorized “access and exfiltration, theft or disclosure as a result of the businesses’ violation of the duty to implement and maintain reasonable security procedures and practices…to protect the personal information.” A consumer bringing such action may seek the greater of actual damages or statutory damages (capped at $750 per consumer, per incident), in addition to injunctive and declaratory relief if appropriate.

Safe Harbor. Prior to filing a private right of action, a consumer must provide a business with written notice of any intent to sue at least 30 days in advance of bringing any such suit. The consumer must also notify the California Attorney General within 30 days of filing the suit. The Attorney General must notify the consumer within 30 days after receiving such notice if the Attorney General’s office intends to prosecute. Business have 30 days from notice of alleged noncompliance to cure any alleged violation.

Civil Penalties. The CCPA allows for the collection of civil penalties by the Attorney General up to $7,500 per violation to be assessed pursuant to California’s Unfair Competition Law (“UCL”) at California Business and Professions Code § 17206.

New Amendments

California AG Objections

On August 22, 2018, California AG Xavier Becerra sent a letter to California lawmakers to express his concern that the CCPA “imposes several unworkable obligations and serious operational challenges” upon the AG’s office. The AG has five primary concerns with the existing language of the CCPA:

AG Advice and Safe Harbor. The CCPA requires the AG to provide opinions to “[a]ny business or third party” as well as warnings and an opportunity to cure before the business can be held accountable for a violation of the CCPA. AG Becerra says requiring the AG’s office to provide “legal counsel at taxpayers’ expense to all inquiring businesses creates the unprecedented obligation of using public funds to provide unlimited legal advice to private parties.” AG Becerra also claims this provision creates a potential conflict of interest by having the AG’s office provide legal advice to parties who may be violating the privacy rights of Californians – “the very people that the AGO is sworn to protect.” AG Becerra queries – “[w]hat could be more unfair and unconscionable than to advantage violators of consumers’ privacy by providing them with legal counsel at taxpayer expense but leaving the victims of the privacy violation on their own?”

Unconstitutionality of Penalties. The AG claims the CCPA’s civil penalty provisions are “likely unconstitutional” because the penalties would be applied under California’s Business and Professions Code § 17206. Because Business and Professions Code § 17206 was enacted by the voters through Proposition 64 in 2004, and cannot be amended through legislation pursuant to the California Constitution (Article II, § 10), the current penalty provision may be void. AG Becerra proposes to “address this constitutional infirmity by simply replacing the CCPA’s current penalty provision with a conventional stand-alone enforcement provision that does not purport to modify the UCL.”

AG Notice. AG Becerra claims the requirement that private litigants give notice to the AG before filing suit is “unnecessary” and “has no purpose as the courts not the Attorney General decide the merits of private lawsuits.” AG Becerra claims this provision “imposes unnecessary personnel and administrative costs on the AGO and it, too, should be eliminated.”

Lack of Resources. The CCPA requires the AG’s office to conduct rulemaking within one year, but the AG argues there are insufficient resources for the AG’s office to carry out the rule-making or carry out implementation thereafter. “The nature and pace of the rule-making process,” writes Becerra, “especially in light of the broad public interest in privacy issues, does not lend itself to a short-circuited timeframe to formulate the rules that will govern the oversight and enforcement of the CCPA’s privacy rights.” AG Becerra notes that a one-year deadline to establish implementing regulations for the CCPA are unattainable, and the AG’s office must be given a sufficient and realistic amount of time to issue “strong, enforceable regulations.”

Private Right of Action. The AG believes there should be a private right of action to sue under the CCPA because a lack of a private right of action will substantially increase the AG’s office’s need for new enforcement resources.

SB-1121 Amendment

In addition to clarifying the definition of “personal information” and the relevant exemptions (highlighted above), the amendments in SB-1121 also extend the AG’s one-year deadline to issue implementing regulations by six months, from January 1 to July 1, 2020 and clarify the civil penalties are limited to $2,500 for each violation, and up to $7,500 for each intentional violation (and are removed from Business and Professions Code § 17206).

Key Takeaways

The Law Will Likely Change Before January 1, 2020

Although the CCPA does not take effect until January 1, 2020, it will likely change between now and then. As can be seen in SB-1121, amendments are only just beginning to trickle in. The law will likely be revised several times before its effective date. Thus, although compliance efforts now will mitigate costs in the future, the particular nuances of the law have yet to be finalized.

If Unchanged, The New Law Will Change The Way You Use Cookies

The CCPA requires businesses to disclose to consumers “at or before the point of collection” the “categories of personal information to be collected and the purposes for which the categories of personal information shall be used.” Because the phrase “personal information” is defined broadly to include IP addresses, “Internet or other electronic network activity information” such as “browsing history, search history, and information regarding a consumer’s interaction with an Internet Web site, application, or advertisement”, this means businesses will need to disclose to consumers at the point of placement of a cookie the nature of the information collected by the cookie, and the purposes for which the personal information will be used once collected. Unless changed, this will require a change in how businesses who are not otherwise covered under the GDPR handle cookie disclosures. For example, if your business places 45 cookies for each web experience, you will be required to disclose the categories of personal information collected through those cookies (e.g., IP address, browsing history, etc.) and explain why you collect such information (e.g., statistical, marketing, user experience purposes).

Data Segregation And Cybersecurity Are Key

If the current definition of “personal information” remains, businesses should work to have a robust understanding of their current data flows, map all data received and transmitted (including to and from vendors), and think through appropriate ways to segregate the data. Undertaking this process now will help mitigate the compliance burden come 2020 as it will make it easier for you and your business to respond to consumer demands for disclosure, deletion, and portability. Sounds cybersecurity practices are also key to mitigating liability under the new law. A private right of action, for example, may only be brought if the personal information of a consumer is both unencrypted and unredacted. Thus, if a business encrypts the personal information of the consumer, and that information is stolen, there will be no private right of action under the CCPA. That does not mean, however, that the business would be completely off the hook. The California data breach notification law would still require a business to notify consumers (and potentially the Attorney General) if the encrypted information was accessed or taken along with the encryption key. No such language is present in the CCPA. The new law also only permits a private right of action if the business violates its duty to “implement and maintain reasonable security procedures and practices…to protect the personal information.” This means that businesses should audit their current cybersecurity practices, policies, and procedures to ensure they are matching industry standards and building a robust cyber resilient framework to serve as a defense to any future causes of action under this new law.

If you or your company would like more information about the CCPA and how it may impact your operations, the Dentons Privacy and Cybersecurity team is ready to help. From data mapping to cybersecurity risk assessments, our team is well suited to prepare your business for compliance in a way that remains flexible to the extent the law changes further prior to its January 1, 2020 implementation date.

[1] The CCPA defines “personal information” to include IP addresses. The CCPA therefore applies, ostensibly, to any business that receives 50,000 IP addresses per year on its website, which is only an average of approximately 137 unique visitors per day.

[2] The phrase “medical information” under the CCPA is defined by California Civil Code § 56.05(j), which defines the phrase to mean “any individually identifiable information” in electronic or physical form,

California recently became the first state in the union to pass a cybersecurity law addressing “smart” devices and Internet of Things (IoT) technology. The term IoT generally refers to anything connected to the internet, including smart hom…

California recently became the first state in the union to pass a cybersecurity law addressing “smart” devices and Internet of Things (IoT) technology. The term IoT generally refers to anything connected to the internet, including smart home devices (e.g., Amazon’s Alexa, NEST thermostats, etc.). The new bill, SB-327, was introduced last year, passed the Senate in late August, was signed by the governor in September, and will go into effect January 1, 2020.

Below is a summary of California’s new law and some takeaways for IoT device manufacturers as they move toward January 1, 2020 compliance.

Core Security Obligation

The new law addresses the security obligations of “manufacturers” of connected devices. “Manufacturer” is defined under the new law as “the person who manufacturers, or contracts with another person to manufacture on the person’s behalf, connected devices that are sold or offered for sale in California.” (Civ. Code § 1798.91.05(c)) The new law therefore impacts manufacturers outside of California.

Under the new law, a covered “manufacturer” of a connected device must equip the device with a “reasonable security feature or features” that are:

“Appropriate to the nature and function of the device[;]”

“Appropriate to the information it may collect, contain, or transmit[;]” and

The phrase “security feature” is defined as a “feature of a device designed to provide security for that device.” (Civ. Code § 1798.91.05(d)) The phrase “unauthorized access, destruction use, modification, or disclosure” is defined to mean “access, destruction, use, modification, or disclosure that is not authorized by the consumer.” (Civ. Code § 1798.91.05(e))

If the device is equipped with a “means for authentication outside a local area network, it shall be deemed a reasonable security feature” if either of the following security requirements are met:

The reprogrammed password is unique to each device manufactured[;] or

The device contains a security feature that requires a user to generate a new means of authentication before access is granted to the device for the first time. (Civ. Code § 1798.91.04(b)(1)-(2))

Takeaways

Manufacturers Are Not Responsible For User Choices Or Third Party App Providers The new law makes clear that a covered manufacturer will not be responsible for unaffiliated third-party software or applications that a user chooses to add to a connected device. (Civ. Code § 1798.91.06(a)) Manufacturers are also not required to prevent a user from having full control over a connected device, including the ability to modify the software or firmware running on the device at the user’s discretion. (Civ. Code § 1798.91.06(c)) Finally, the law imposes no obligations on the provider of any “electronic store, gateway, marketplace, or other means of purchasing or downloading software or applications[.]” (Civ. Code § 1798.91.06(b))

Medical Devices Are Likely Excluded The new law states that it does not apply to any connected device the functionality of which is subject to security requirements under federal law, regulations, or guidance promulgated by a federal agency pursuant to its regulatory enforcement authority. (Civ. Code § 1798.91.06(d)) This would ostensibly include connected medical devices that are regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Since 2014, the FDA has issued guidance governing the cybersecurity requirements for regulated medical devices.

No Private Right of Action The new law makes clear that there will be no private right of action. “The Attorney General, a city attorney, a county counsel, or a district attorney shall have the exclusive authority to enforce this title.” (Civ. Code § 1798.91.06(e))

HIPAA Exception The new law excludes a covered entity, provider of health care, business associate, health care service plan, contractor, employer, or any other person subject to HIPAA or the Confidentiality of Medical Information Act with “respect to any activity regulated by those acts.” (Civ. Code § 1798.91.06(h))

Risk Assessments Are Key As with most new cybersecurity laws, the most prudent course of action until the law enters into effect is to conduct a risk assessment of current products subject to the law, and to determine what security measures are in place. These security measures can be measured against appropriate industry standards, including the cybersecurity frameworks promulgated by the National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST) and the International Standards Organization (ISO). Until there is more enforcement guidance or action taken with respect to this new law, or until the new law is amended before its January 1, 2010 enforcement date, what will be deemed “appropriate” under the new law remains an open question.

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As over half a million people marched to Westminster this weekend for a People’s Vote – a demand for a second referendum on the eventual Brexit deal – this put me in mind of one essential similarity between the UK referendum-hopefuls (on th…

As over half a million people marched to Westminster this weekend for a People’s Vote – a demand for a second referendum on the eventual Brexit deal – this put me in mind of one essential similarity between the UK referendum-hopefuls (on the one hand) and global Data Protection Officers (on the other): A desire for control over the direction of events following the 29 March 2019. Less than 6 months away from “Brexit Day”, two questions asked daily by our global clients are: How will Brexit affect data transfers to and from the UK? And how best should we prepare?

A Brexit deal is essentially uncertain – ironically for the demonstrators, that uncertainty is only likely to be exacerbated in the short term by any prospect of a further referendum. A transition period covering data flows is similarly moot. The prospect of an adequacy decision is months or even years away, if the pace of progress in the European Commission’s dealings with Japan and South Korea is anything to judge by.

Therefore, rather than crystal-ball gazing at more attractive alternatives, the only sensible approach, in my view, is to prepare now for the absence of a deal on data transfers – the so-called “Hard Brexit” scenario. A “Hard Brexit” for data privacy means the UK becoming, as of the later of 29 March 2019 or the end of a transition period which covers data flows, a “third country” within the meaning of GDPR.

The practical preparations required would include the following:-

Territorial Scope Assessment – a global business will already be familiar with exploring whether their non-EEA establishments are caught by Article 3(2) GDPR. A UK establishment will now have to ask themselves the same questions: (i) Are we offering goods or services to data subjects in the EEA? (ii) Are we monitoring the behaviour of data subjects, as far as their behaviour takes place in the EEA?

Accountability – if the answer to the territorial scope assessment above is “yes”, then this should be acted upon by the UK establishment. However, if GDPR compliance programmes have been completed, then the UK establishment will be in a strong starting position. The assessment should be documented internally for the benefit of supervisory authorities in the affected Member States. It may also be beneficial for clarity to split away the UK Article 30 Records of Processing caught within extra-territorial scope of GDPR.

Appoint a Representative – the UK establishment should, subject to the exceptions in Art 27(2) applying, appoint a representative in writing in one of the Member States affected by the UK establishment’s processing activities. For a business with multiple EEA establishments, another existing establishment may suffice.

Data Exports – in the absence of an adequacy decision, for organisations caught by GDPR, one of the safeguards in Article 46 GDPR must be selected for any data transfers to the UK. In many cases these will be the standard contractual clauses approved by the European Commission, although businesses who have Binding Corporate Rules in place may continue to rely on BCRs. Addressing Brexit issues will involve e.g. the review of intra-group agreements governing data transfers to re-badge UK establishments as Data Importers and processor contracts with vendors to ensure that adequate safeguards are in place.

Privacy Notices – privacy notices need to set out (where applicable) the fact that a controller intends to transfer personal data to a recipient in a third country as well as the safeguards which are in place. For organisations caught by GDPR, once the “data exports” task above has been completed, a minor redraft of privacy notices to capture the new additional information will need to be completed.

Main Establishment – for an organisation caught by GDPR to benefit from the One-Stop-Shop, the “main establishment” will have to be based in a Member State. Where the “main establishment” is currently in the UK, a defensible case may have to be built for why another establishment should be re-designated as the “main establishment” post-Brexit. In some circumstances, it may be that decision-making functions and resources will have to be shifted out of the UK to another establishment.

Reliance on Union or Member State Law – in certain circumstances, the GDPR makes provision for legal bases which align to Union or Member State Law. For example, in order to rely upon Article 6(c) or (e) GDPR as a basis for lawful processing. Where processing involves UK establishments they will not be able to claim reliance on UK laws in relation to processing which is caught by extra-territorial scope of GDPR in the same way that a US entity would not be able to rely upon US law. This may involve some creative re-thinking or risk decisions. If anyone is able to solve what I will euphemistically call the “Article 10” dilemma, I welcome answers on a (non-literal) postcard!

For UK establishments, the GDPR will be incorporated into UK law on 29 March 2019 as a result of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018. Therefore, the story will be otherwise largely one of continuity in terms of other areas of the law, including data subject rights, controller and processor obligations and data export arrangements, save for any provisions relating to EDPB and One-Stop-Shop. Which leads me onto…

A Better Alternative for Data Privacy in the UK?

Rather than seek adequacy (or even, adequacy+), there may be a more attractive model for the continuing relationship of the UK with the EU in respect of data transfers.

By result of a Joint Committee Decision (JCD), the GDPR entered into force in the EEA EFTA States of Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway on 20 July 2018. This enables the supervisory authorities of the EFTA States to participate fully in the one-stop-shop, the consistency mechanism and the European Data Protection Board (EDPB), save for the fact that they are not able to vote or stand for election as chair or deputy chair of the EDPB.

In the event that the UK became an EEA EFTA State, this would (i) enable the UK ICO to remain part of the consistency mechanism and the one-stop-shop (ii) enable the UK ICO, which is well-resourced and has a wealth of experience, to continue to approve and monitor Binding Corporate Rules and have a limited participatory role in the EDPB and, crucially, (iii) avoid all of the legal issues outlined above. From the perspective of data transfers, could this be the best possible ready-beaten path, save for full membership of the EU?